Dylan J. Clements
University of Pennsylvania
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Publication
Featured researches published by Dylan J. Clements.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009
Sungwook Choi; Andre Isaacs; Dylan J. Clements; Dahui Liu; Hyemin Kim; Richard W. Scott; Jeffrey D. Winkler; William F. DeGrado
The emergence of drug-resistant bacteria has compromised the use of many conventional antibiotics, leading to heightened interest in a variety of antimicrobial peptides. Although these peptides have attractive potential as antibiotics, their size, stability, tissue distribution, and toxicity have hampered attempts to harness these capabilities. To address such issues, we have developed small (molecular mass <1,000 Da) arylamide foldamers that mimic antimicrobial peptides. Hydrogen-bonded restraints in the arylamide template rigidify the conformation via hydrogen bond formation and increase activity toward Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli. The designed foldamers are highly active against S. aureus in an animal model. These results demonstrate the application of foldamer templates as therapeutics.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2007
Nicholas Beckloff; Danielle Laube; Tammy Castro; David Furgang; Steven Park; David S. Perlin; Dylan J. Clements; Haizhong Tang; Richard W. Scott; Gregory N. Tew; Gill Diamond
ABSTRACT Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are naturally occurring, broad-spectrum antimicrobial agents that have recently been examined for their utility as therapeutic antibiotics. Unfortunately, they are expensive to produce and are often sensitive to protease digestion. To address this problem, we have examined the activity of a peptide mimetic whose design was based on the structure of magainin, exhibiting its amphiphilic structure. We demonstrate that this compound, meta-phenylene ethynylene (mPE), exhibits antimicrobial activity at nanomolar concentrations against a variety of bacterial and Candida species found in oral infections. Since Streptococcus mutans, an etiological agent of dental caries, colonizes the tooth surface and forms a biofilm, we quantified the activity of this compound against S. mutans growing under conditions that favor biofilm formation. Our results indicate that mPE can prevent the formation of a biofilm at nanomolar concentrations. Incubation with 5 nM mPE prevents further growth of the biofilm, and 100 nM mPE reduces viable bacteria in the biofilm by 3 logs. Structure-function analyses suggest that mPE inhibits the bioactivity of lipopolysaccharide and binds DNA at equimolar ratios, suggesting that it may act both as a membrane-active molecule, similar to magainin, and as an intracellular antibiotic, similar to other AMPs. We conclude that mPE and similar molecules display great potential for development as therapeutic antimicrobials.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011
Hitesh D. Thaker; Federica Sgolastra; Dylan J. Clements; Richard W. Scott; Gregory N. Tew
In this report, we describe the synthesis of a new series of small amphiphilic aromatic compounds that mimic the essential properties of cationic antimicrobial peptides using Suzuki-Miyaura coupling. The new design allowed the easy tuning of the conformational restriction, controlled by introduction of intramolecular hydrogen bonds, and the overall hydrophobicity by modifications to the central ring and the side chains. This approach allowed us to better understand the influence of these features on the antimicrobial activity and selectivity. We found that the overall hydrophobicity had a more significant impact on antimicrobial and hemolytic activity than the conformational stiffness. A novel compound was discovered which has MICs of 0.78 μg/mL against S. Aureus and 6.25 μg/mL against E. Coli, similar to the well-known antimicrobial peptide, MSI-78.
ACS Chemical Biology | 2014
Geronda L. Montalvo; Yao Zhang; Trevor M. Young; Michael J. Costanzo; Katie B. Freeman; Jun Wang; Dylan J. Clements; Emma Magavern; Robert W. Kavash; Richard W. Scott; Dahui Liu; William F. DeGrado
A series of self-associating foldamers have been designed as heparin reversal agents, as antidotes to prevent bleeding due to this potent antithrombotic agent. The foldamers have a repeating sequence of Lys-Sal, in which Sal is 5-amino-2-methoxy-benzoic acid. These foldamers are designed to self-associate along one face of an extended chain in a β-sheet-like interaction. The methoxy groups were included to form intramolecular hydrogen bonds that preclude the formation of very large amyloid-like aggregates, while the positively charged Lys side chains were introduced to interact electrostatically with the highly anionic heparin polymer. The prototype compound (Lys-Sal)4 carboxamide weakly associates in aqueous solution at physiological salt concentration in a monomer-dimer-hexamer equilibrium. The association is greatly enhanced at either high ionic strength or in the presence of a heparin derivative, which is bound tightly. Variants of this foldamer are active in an antithrombin III–factor Xa assay, showing their potential as heparin reversal agents.
Angewandte Chemie | 2004
Dahui Liu; Sungwook Choi; Bin Chen; Robert J. Doerksen; Dylan J. Clements; Jeffrey D. Winkler; Michael L. Klein; William F. DeGrado
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2006
Gregory N. Tew; Dylan J. Clements; Haizong Tang; Lachelle Arnt; Richard W. Scott
Angewandte Chemie | 2005
Sungwook Choi; Dylan J. Clements; Vojislava Pophristic; Ivaylo Ivanov; Satyavani Vemparala; Joel S. Bennett; Michael L. Klein; Jeffrey D. Winkler; William F. DeGrado
Angewandte Chemie | 2004
Dahui Liu; Sungwook Choi; Bin Chen; Robert J. Doerksen; Dylan J. Clements; Jeffrey D. Winkler; Michael L. Klein; William F. DeGrado
Archive | 2014
William Degrado; Geronda L. Montalvo; Yao Zhang; Trevor Young; Michael J. Costanzo; Katie B. Freeman; Jizhou Wang; Dylan J. Clements; Emma Magavern; Robert W. Kavash; Richard W. Scott
Angewandte Chemie | 2005
Sungwook Choi; Dylan J. Clements; Vojislava Pophristic; Ivaylo Ivanov; Satyavani Vemparala; Joel S. Bennett; Michael L. Klein; Jeffrey D. Winkler; William F. DeGrado